Women in literature
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Women in literature
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Women in literature
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Incoming Resources
- Women and autonomy in Kate Chopin's short fiction, Allen F. Stein
- Women, women writers, and the West, [edited] by L. L. Lee and Merrill Lewis
- Anxiety of erasure:, trauma, authorship, and the diaspora in Arab women's writings, Hanadi Al-Samman
- Roman Shakespeare, warriors, wounds, and women, Coppélia Kahn
- Well-behaved women seldom make history, by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
- The distaff side, representing the female in Homer's Odyssey, edited by Beth Cohen
- The sexual woman in Latin American literature, dangerous desires, Diane E. Marting
- Unruly women, performance, penitence, and punishment in early modern Spain, Margaret E. Boyle
- Mujeres, de la tutela a la palabra, la mirada naturalista en las novelas de amor para mujeres, Ana Martín
- How to be a heroine, or, what I've learned from reading too much, Samantha Ellis
- Wonder woman unbound, the curious history of the world's most famous heroine, Tim Hanley
- American women playwrights, 1900-1950, Yvonne Shafer
- Estudios en honor de Janet Perez, el sujeto femenino en escritoras hispanicas, Susana Cavallo, Luis A. Jiménez y Oralia Preble-Nieme, editions
- A bookshelf of our own, works that changed women's lives, Deborah G. Felder
- Feminist readings of Antigone, edited by Fanny Söderbäck
- Male domination, female revolt, race, class, and gender in Kuwaiti women's fiction, by Ishaq Tijani
- Negotiating a perilous empowerment, Appalachian women's literacies, by Erica Abrams Locklear
- Brave dames and wimpettes, what women are really doing on page and screen, Susan Isaacs
- Cassandra speaks, when women are the storytellers, the human story changes, Elizabeth Lesser
- Woman as sex object, studies in erotic art, 1730-1970, edited by Thomas B. Hess and Linda Nochlin
- Follies of God, Tennessee Williams and the Women of the Fog, James Grissom
- Who was Harriet Beecher Stowe?, by Dana Meachen Rau ; illustrated by Gregory Copeland
- The emancipated:, a novel, George Gissing
- Teaching Hemingway and gender
- Walker Percy's feminine characters, edited by Lewis A. Lawson and Elzbieta H. Oleksy
- Women in British Chinese writings, subjectivity, identity, and hybridity, Yun-Hua Hsiao
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman's short stories as social criticism, conflicts and contradictions in a nineteenth-century author, Gamze Sabanci ; with a foreword by Jill Rudd
- Graphic women, life narrative and contemporary comics, Hillary L. Chute
- Irishness and womanhood in nineteenth-century British writing, Thomas Tracy
- Latin-American women writers, class, race, and gender, Myriam Yvonne Jehenson
- The sexual education of Edith Wharton, Gloria C. Erlich
- Women on women, Indian women writers' perspectives on women, [edited by] Asha Choubey
- Queridas, un viaje por la memoria, Viridiana Molinares Hassan ; fotografías de Mónica Vásquez Alfaro
- Le bonheur au féminin, stratégies narratives des romancières des Lumières, Isabelle Tremblay
- Clarissa's narrators, Victor J. Lams
- Graphic women, life narrative and contemporary comics, Hillary L. Chute
- The Da Vinci Code in the Academy, edited by Bradley Bowers
- Engendering Rome, women in Latin epic, A.M. Keith
- Professional domesticity in the Victorian novel, women, work, and home, Monica F. Cohen
- Shakespeare and women, Phyllis Rackin
- The heroine's bookshelf, life lessons from Jane Austen to Laura Ingalls Wilder, Erin Blakemore
- You look good for your age, an anthology, Rona Altrows, editor
- Wonder woman unbound, the curious history of the world's most famous heroine, Tim Hanley
- Male novelists and their female voices, literary masquerades, by Anne Robinson Taylor
- Transforming the Cinderella dream, from Frances Burney to Charlotte Bronte, Huang Mei
- Love between the covers
- Sirens of the Western shore:, the westernesque femme fatale, translation, and vernacular style in modern Japanese literature, Indra Levy
- The flesh made word, female figures and women's bodies, Helena Michie
- How to Be a Heroine : Or, What I've Learned from Reading Too Much
- The Hemingway women, Bernice Kert
Outgoing Resources
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